"How was the film?" I asked, when I got back that evening. Angela had moved out by this time, and Martine and I were living together, but she and her friends from the hospital had taken to going the cinema or for a curry most Friday or Saturday evenings when she wasn't in Esher visiting her parents.
"So, so," she said. "How was your game?"
"Shit," I told her. "We dropped two points against just about the worst team in the league."
I blamed her for it, in fact.
Angela had come round in the morning to pick up the last of her things, and Martine had opened the door to her in her negligée. I could tell Angela had been crying, and the cruel smirk on Martine's face as she watched the woman whose fiancé she'd pinched gathering her mugs and saucepans from the kitchen before creeping out with a mumbled apology for interrupting us would have cost her the few friends she had among the WAGS in our circle if they'd seen it.
As it happened, we hadn't been making love when Angela rang so she hadn't interrupted anything – it was a match day and I hate having sex in the morning on match days – but it pained me that she should humble herself in that way. Who was she apologising to, anyway? To Martine?? To the woman who'd taken me from her? Surely not. To me then? I should have been the one apologising to her!
Unless Jim was right, of course, and all really is fair in love and war. "Nice has nothing to do with it, mate" he'd replied, when I'd said Angela deserved better treatment than I'd given her. "It's the survival of the fittest. The strongest – or the sexiest, whatever – win out, and they're the ones who get to breed. The rest? Well, it's cruel but that's Nature's way. And look on the bright side: it means women will go on getting stronger and sexier from now until the end of time."
I found that analysis a little sickening. And applied to Angela, it was wildly overstating the case. She was bound to find someone else. She hadn't yet, obviously, but she would. She was anything but unattractive.
She wasn't in Martine's class, though. That was the problem. And I couldn't pretend it boiled down to anything other than sex appeal because I'd dumped Angela before I'd even had time to get to know Martine.
So Jim was right, essentially, in my case, at least. It really was the law of the jungle.
That was certainly the way Martine saw it. After watching Angela carrying the last cardboard box full of kitchen utensils to the door, with her head bowed (though that was probably because the box was too full and she was holding down the coffee percolator with her chin to stop it falling), pulling the door open with her foot, laying the box down again in the landing so she could close the door quietly and slip away like a chambermaid fearful of a caning, Martine stood up brisky, turned, peeled off her negligée and tossed it over her head, towards the door through which her rival had just fled like a wuss without even a fight.
"I need a fuck!" she said. It sounded less like a statement than a command. Drawn up to her full height, all five foot ten of her, buck naked, her nipples standing out proudly, her eyes her shining with triumph, Martine was glowing, incandescent, with health, with youth, with beauty. Against genes like hers, Angela hadn't stood a chance. Match day or no match day, she was irresistible. So much so that I came within about twenty seconds of entry, apologized and hard to start again. Twenty minutes later, we did it a third time. No wonder I played like shit.
"So you drowned your sorrows in the pub, then, did you?" said Martine, smelling the beer on my breath. "Pooh! Get away from me."
She was only half serious, and I took her point. I hate kissing girls who smoke. She didn't drink. It was only natural she should hate the smell of alcohol.
"I'll brush my teeth," I told her.
"That won't help. Was she there?"
"Who?" I asked, as if I didn't know.
"The northern slapper: Miss Burrenleh." Again, the crude stab at a Burnley accent.
"What's wrong with her accent?"
"It's common as muck. That's what's wrong with it."
"I think it's a beautiful accent. I suppose you think my accent's common too."
"Well, I've always known you were common," she said, sauntering over with a seductive swing of the hips, and put her hands on my shoulders. "But with you, there are compensations."
I leant in to kiss her, but as soon as she smelt my breath, she turned away again, fanning the beery fug skywards with her hand. "Pooh! Get away from me."
I hadn't been going to tell her, because I knew it would only lead to further trouble, but now I did:
"By the way, I have a message for you."
"What? From her?"
"Who else?"
"Do tell!" Beer breath or no beer breath, this interested her; she took me again in her arms, and kissed me, on the side of the cheek, then again, on the side of my throat, just under the ear, before adding in an almost breathless whisper. "What did she say? What did the little cxnt say? I'm just so interested." The last bit, dripping with sarcasm and disdain.
Sheila's threat sounded lame after a build-up like that, which was no doubt the effect Martine intended. I delivered the message all the same.
"Well, you tell her from me: if she wants a fight, I'll give her one, and I'll squish her like a bug! In the meantime, I'll go where I want and do what I want. No northern slapper gives me orders."